radium
v0.26.2
Published
A set of tools to manage inline styles on React elements
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Radium
yarn add radium
# or
npm install --save radium
Radium is a set of tools to manage inline styles on React elements. It gives you powerful styling capabilities without CSS.
Inspired by React: CSS in JS by vjeux.
Maintenance Status
Stable: Formidable is not planning to develop any new features for this project. We are still responding to bug reports and security concerns. We are still welcoming PRs for this project, but PRs that include new features should be small and easy to integrate and should not include breaking changes.
For more about what this means for Radium, view our announcement here.
Overview
Eliminating CSS in favor of inline styles that are computed on the fly is a powerful approach, providing a number of benefits over traditional CSS:
- Scoped styles without selectors
- Avoids specificity conflicts
- Source order independence
- Dead code elimination
- Highly expressive
Despite that, there are some common CSS features and techniques that inline styles don't easily accommodate: media queries, browser states (:hover, :focus, :active) and modifiers (no more .btn-primary!). Radium offers a standard interface and abstractions for dealing with these problems.
When we say expressive, we mean it: math, concatenation, regex, conditionals, functions–JavaScript is at your disposal. Modern web applications demand that the display changes when data changes, and Radium is here to help.
For a short technical explanation, see How does Radium work?.
Features
- Conceptually simple extension of normal inline styles
- Browser state styles to support
:hover
,:focus
, and:active
- Media queries
- Automatic vendor prefixing
- Keyframes animation helper
- ES6 class and
createClass
support
Docs
Usage
Start by wrapping your component class with Radium()
, like export default Radium(Component)
, or Component = Radium(Component)
, which works with classes, createClass
, and stateless components (functions that take props and return a ReactElement). Then, write a style object as you normally would with inline styles, and add in styles for interactive states and media queries. Pass the style object to your component via style={...}
and let Radium do the rest!
<Button kind="primary">Radium Button</Button>
import Radium from 'radium';
import React from 'react';
import color from 'color';
class Button extends React.Component {
static propTypes = {
kind: PropTypes.oneOf(['primary', 'warning']).isRequired
};
render() {
// Radium extends the style attribute to accept an array. It will merge
// the styles in order. We use this feature here to apply the primary
// or warning styles depending on the value of the `kind` prop. Since its
// all just JavaScript, you can use whatever logic you want to decide which
// styles are applied (props, state, context, etc).
return (
<button style={[styles.base, styles[this.props.kind]]}>
{this.props.children}
</button>
);
}
}
Button = Radium(Button);
// You can create your style objects dynamically or share them for
// every instance of the component.
var styles = {
base: {
color: '#fff',
// Adding interactive state couldn't be easier! Add a special key to your
// style object (:hover, :focus, :active, or @media) with the additional rules.
':hover': {
background: color('#0074d9')
.lighten(0.2)
.hexString()
}
},
primary: {
background: '#0074D9'
},
warning: {
background: '#FF4136'
}
};
Importing Radium
As of v0.22.x
, Radium is built as an ECMAScript Modules-first project. We now have a package.json:module
entry pointing to our library files with import|export
statements instead of CommonJS require
s. We still support CommonJS require
s with a special package.json:main
entry pointing to root index.js
to smooth over this transition. The basic takeaways are:
If you are using ESM with webpack or @std/esm
with Node.js, imports like the following work fine without any gotchas:
import Radium from 'radium';
import Radium, {Style} from 'radium';
If you are using CommonJS with Node.js or webpack@1 requires work like normal:
const Radium = require('radium');
const {Style} = require('radium');
If you are using CommonJS with webpack@2+, however, you must instead add .default
to the root Radium
object import:
const Radium = require('radium').default; // CHANGED: Must add `.default`
const {Style} = require('radium'); // Works as per normal
If you cannot change the require
statements directly (say Radium is included from a different library your project depends on) you can manually tweak the Radium import in your project's webpack configuration with the following:
resolve: {
alias: {
radium: require.resolve('radium/index');
}
}
which will allow const Radium = require('radium');
to still work. The configuration effectively forces webpack to point to code from package.json:main
(which points to /index.js
) instead of what is in package.json:module
.
Note: Radium uses Reflect
which is not supported in IE11. You will need to bring in a polyfill like CoreJs in order to support <IE11.
Examples
To see the universal examples:
npm install
npm run universal
To see local client-side only examples in action, do this:
npm install
npm run examples
How does Radium work?
Following is a short technical explanation of Radium's inner workings:
- Wrap the
render
function - Recurse into the result of the original
render
- For each element:
- Add handlers to props if interactive styles are specified, e.g.
onMouseEnter
for:hover
, wrapping existing handlers if necessary - If any of the handlers are triggered, e.g. by hovering, Radium calls
setState
to update a Radium-specific field on the components state object - On re-render, resolve any interactive styles that apply, e.g.
:hover
, by looking up the element's key or ref in the Radium-specific state
- Add handlers to props if interactive styles are specified, e.g.
More with Radium
You can find a list of other tools, components, and frameworks to help you build with Radium on our wiki. Contributions welcome!
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING